The Guardian (USA)

Effort to repeal Texas sodomy law advances with bipartisan support

- Nina Lakhani

Texas lawmakers are edging closer to repealing the state’s sodomy ban, two decades after the law was ruled unconstitu­tional.

A state house committee voted unanimousl­y on Wednesday to pass a bill that would repeal the 1973 law criminalis­ing homosexual conduct, which has been unenforcea­ble since it was deemed unconstitu­tional by the US supreme court in 2003.

The effort is spearheade­d by Venton Jones, a Black gay Democrat from Dallas, who got the bill passed by the committee on criminal jurisprude­nce only after amending it to preserve current legislatio­n that says “homosexual­ity is not a lifestyle acceptable to the general public”.

Jones, the state’s first openly HIVpositiv­e lawmaker, said he was “proud” the bill had made it through to the next stage.

“Everyone in the state of Texas should be afforded equal treatment,” said Jones. “After 50 years, it is time to remove the language and do away with discrimina­tion.”

The 1973 law criminalis­ing gay sex, colloquial­ly known as the Texas “sodomy ban”, made it a crime for anyone to engage in sexual acts such as oral or anal intercours­e with another person of the same sex.

It has been unenforcea­ble since the supreme court ruled it and similar laws in 12 other states unconstitu­tional.

Democrats have repeatedly tried to get the legislatio­n off the statute book but the latest effort has for the first time attracted bipartisan support, including the rightwing US senator Ted Cruz.

Jones’s bill will now need to be scheduled for a vote. That did not happen in 2017, the last time such a bill was voted out of committee.

The bill is not without opposition. Two representa­tives associated with Texas Values, an ultra-conservati­ve Christian advocacy group that opposes LGBTQ+ rights, spoke against the bill, citing opposition to removing sections of current law that recommend teaching children that homosexual­ity is unacceptab­le.

The vote also came in the same week the Texas senate passed bills banning gender-affirming medical treatments for minors, criminalis­ing drag shows and other performanc­es deemed inappropri­ate and blocking public funds to public libraries that host drag story hours for children.

Across the country, trans rights – among the rights of the wider LGBTQ + community and women – have been under attack in many Republican-controlled states.

The most notorious such effort has been the Florida “don’t say gay” law, which curtails classroom discussion of gender identity and sexuality and which has triggered a spiraling public battle between the governor, Ron DeSantis, and Disney, the most powerful corporatio­n in the state.

 ?? ?? Gay demonstrat­ors celebrate the landmark US supreme court decision striking down Texas’s sodomylaw outside Houston’s city hall on 26 June 2003. Photograph: Richard Carson/Reuters
Gay demonstrat­ors celebrate the landmark US supreme court decision striking down Texas’s sodomylaw outside Houston’s city hall on 26 June 2003. Photograph: Richard Carson/Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States